Justin Fichelson (center) and Roh Habibi will be featured in the reality TV show “Million Dollar Listing San Francisco” starting in July.

Photo: Kim White / Bravo Media

LOS ANGELES, CA – APRIL 2: Cast members Justin Fichelson (L) and Roh Habibi participate in a panel of “Million Dollar Listing San Francisco” during NBCUniversal Summer Press Day on April 2, 2015 in Pasadena, California. (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)

Photo: Kevork Djansezian, Getty Images

LOS ANGELES, CA – APRIL 2: Executive producer Danielle King (L) and cast members Justin Fichelson (C), and Roh Habibi participate in a panel of “Million Dollar Listing San Francisco” during NBCUniversal Summer Press Day on April 2, 2015 in Pasadena, California. (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)

Photo: Kevork Djansezian, Getty Images

Bravo has announced the names of the three Bay Area real estate agents who will star in the San Francisco version of its “Million Dollar Listing” reality show.

The program started filming in October and premieres July 8. Like the New York, Los Angeles and Miami versions, the San Francisco episodes follow the personal and professional lives of agents selling homes that generally cost well over a million dollars.

In San Francisco, where the median home hit $1,092,500 in February, a mere million might get you a 2/1 condo in the Mission — not the kind of “over-the-top properties” viewers tune in to see, said Jenn Levy, a senior vice president with Bravo.

The San Francisco stars — Justin Fichelson, Roh Habibi and Andrew Greenwell — fit the show’s mold. They are young (30 or 31), good-looking and ambitious.

The show casts agents who are “working in the right luxury market and have a business that is either successful or on the verge of being really successful. We look for guys who have dynamic personalities and are approaching real estate in a different way from each other,” Levy said.

The franchise features only one female agent, in Miami. It started out as a program “about young Turks,” Levy said.

The San Francisco stars each said they joined the cast because of the exposure it would give themselves and their listings, especially to overseas buyers, who make up a growing part of the Bay Area market.

Habibi, who was born in Afghanistan and moved here with his family in the 1980s, is a broker associate with Coldwell Banker Previews International in San Francisco.

He quit his job at JPMorgan and went into real estate three years ago with the hope of becoming a character on the show when it expanded to San Francisco. When he first became an agent, “I was mimicking what the agents were doing on the show, dressing like them, talking like them.” On his social media posts, “I was always hashtagging MDLSF,” which brought him to the attention of the producers, he said.

At first, his parents were apprehensive about him going on such a show, he said. “I’m an orthodox Muslim, I have a beard,” he said. Given the “bad reputation that has built up about Muslims around the world,” they feared there could be “a pretty bad backlash … hate mail … Internet stuff,” he said. Since filming began, his parents “have warmed up to it,” he said, and even appear on the show, as do his wife and newborn daughter.

Other Bay Area real estate agents make cameo appearances including Joel Goodrich, also of Coldwell Banker. “Roh reached out to me to play his senior mentor” on the show, Goodrich said.

Habibi’s biggest surprise: Not all of his clients want to be onscreen. “Turns out people very much value their privacy,” he said.

Fichelson has also been selling homes for three years. He left Decker Bullock Sotheby’s in San Francisco to join Climb Real Estate in October. Climb “was more in tune with what is going on in Pacific Heights,” where most buyers are tech people, he said. Fichelson is a regular in the society pages and co-founded Exploratorium Lab, which raises money for the Exploratorium.

His former boss, Olivia Decker, says she was interviewed for the show via Skype but was not offered a role. She said Fichelson “is adorable, cute, young, good looking, very sociable. He goes to all the social events. He doesn’t sell much. But he knows everybody.”

Fichelson lives in the Marina district with his best friend, his best friend’s wife and their baby, who also appear in the show.

Greenwell has been working in real estate since he was 19. Last year, he started his own company, Venture Sotheby’s International Realty in Pleasanton, which already has 60 agents. Some followed him from his previous job at Keller Williams Tri-Valley Realty.

Greenwell lives in San Francisco during the week and Livermore on weekends. He sells all over the Bay Area, but mostly in the city. He is getting married this week to Paal Salvesen in what Bravo described as an “extravagant wedding.” The couple are setting off from Puerto Rico with 40 people for seven days in 330-foot yacht. Salvesen is a Realtor who works for Greenwell’s firm. He appears in the show, but not in his role as a Realtor.

Greenwell called the show “a lot of work, a lot of fun. The deals are very real” and show the emotions that go along with such a big life decision. “You can’t fake a big deal,” he said.

The national price index was down 0.1 percent in January compared with December. The San Francisco index was down 0.9 percent, which was the biggest monthly decrease among the 20 large metro areas tracked by Case-Shiller.

On an annual basis, January prices were up 7.9 percent in San Francisco, well above the national index, which rose 4.5 percent. However, six cities in the 20-city index posted smaller year-over-year gains in January than they did in December. Of those, San Francisco’s drop-off — from 9.4 percent in December to 7.9 percent in January — was the biggest.